14-24
November 2003
Arab-American activist and Voices delegate Ramzi Kysia - who spent nearly two
years in Iraq before, during and after the war and has only recently returned
to the US - was in the UK between 14th and the 24th November and spoke to groups
around the country. Ramzi Kysia is an informed, articulate witness and critic
of U.S. policies and their effects in the Middle Ease. Since
the U.S. occupation began, he has helped a group of Iraqi university students
in Baghdad start an independent newspaper at www.almuajaha.com.
An eloquent writer whose essays have appeared in the Huston Chronicle, San Diego
Tribune, Jordan Times and Common Dreams, Kysia speaks with considerable knowledge
and first-hand experience in the region in the context of his own American-Lebanese
background and Muslim faith. Since 1998, Kysia has worked with EPIC, Voices in
the Wilderness and the National Network to End the War against Iraq to work to
change U.S. policy toward Iraq. Read a recent
article by Ramzi below.
See press release.
Peace
is not an Abstract Idea: Building Tomorrow's House
By RAMZI KYSIA
Counterpunch, August 20, 2003
Having spent a year in Iraq, I remain continuously startled by the things
I see and feel
here. Perhaps I shouldn't still be surprised by the resilience of
these people. Perhaps I
shouldn't still wonder at their ability to absorb incredible amounts
of suffering and go on
with their lives. Or marvel at their determination, in the midst
of suffering, to maintain a
spirit of hospitality and generosity--with strangers and within their
common lives--that is
unsurpassed in any of my travels. But I am surprised. I remain in
a state of perpetual
amazement.
To my shame, I cannot imagine my fellow Americans being able to cope with
even a
fraction of what Iraqis have had to cope with over the last 30 years.
How would America
meet brutal dictatorship, 3 terrible wars resulting in the deaths
of hundreds of thousands
of human beings, the devastating impoverishment and isolation of
13 years of sanctions
resulting in the deaths of hundreds of thousands more, military occupation,
massive
unemployment, out-of-control crime, and months without electricity
or sanitation in 120+
degree heat? September 11 was only a flirting shadow of what Iraqis
have experienced,
and only time--and our active resistance to the Bush Crusade--will
demonstrate if our
democracy can manage to survive its aftermath.
People sometimes ask
me how I feel about our "failure:" the
failure of the anti-sanctions
movement over long years of struggle, the failure of the anti-war
movement over short
months of protest. But that question is itself a lie.
It can be overwhelming to stare, wide-eyed, into the crushing weight of
a $400 billion-a-
year killing machine fed by fear-mongering politicians, headed by
a fool, protected by a
captive media, only existing to protect an entrenched corporate-capitalist
system that is
eating our world alive. But if we would wonder at our inability as
yet to fully overcome the
death sellers and fear merchants, let us also wonder at how hard
they have to work to
keep their system running.
There is always enough money for war, and never enough for peace. We are
always
scrambling to fund our projects, or--on a larger scale--to fund schools
and public
transportation, health care, child care, job training and other human-centered
needs -
while the Pentagon builds all the million-dollar cruise missiles
its black heart desires.
We cry, "O Lord, when will we have peace?" And
the answer is always tomorrow: after
this war, we'll have peace; this killing spree will be the last and
then we'll finally be free to
succor the creative energies of all of God's children, instead of
simply killing them off.
Today is always for war, and tomorrow never comes.
Since the end of this most recent war, the U.S. government has imposed
a $20,000 fine
on Voices in the Wilderness for illegally taking medicine and toys
to children's hospitals
in Iraq before the war. We will never pay this fine, and we will
never stop resisting
violence.
Since the war, Voices
has been continuing our educational work in the U.S., and we've
been building a home in Baghdad. In the U.S., the "Wheels of Justice" bus
tour may soon
be coming to an area near you--come out and join us. Speakers who
have been to Iraq,
and who can give presentations against war and violence are available
for venues large
and small--invite us to come out and join you.
In Iraq, we're renting
a modest place from which to base our work. We've named it "Beit
Al-Bacher"--Iraqi slang for Tomorrow's House. Here, we're helping
a group of young
Iraqis start their own newspaper, called "Al-Muajaha," and publicly
tell their own stories, in
their own words, for the first time in their lives. We're helping
Palestinian families, made
refugees in the aftermath of war, to secure permanent housing. We're
helping Iraqis
who've had family members killed by U.S. forces to seek justice and
compensation for
their losses. We're accompanying non-violent Iraqi activists, such
as the Union of the
Unemployed, as they struggle for their rights beneath an indifferent
and increasingly
violent Occupation that's seemingly only here to loot the country
blind. And we're
continuing the work we did before the war, visiting schools and hospitals
and families,
fostering friendships and practicing love--and it needs practice--which
can stand in the
wake of violence and killing.
Let us cherish our victories, large and small, and live our lives informed
with the
knowledge--proven true time and again--that the greatest of tyrannies
can crumble in the
blink of an eye.
Outspent and out-shouted a-million-to-one by the killers and their apologists,
we
persevere. This isn't testament to some special talents or condition
unique to us--peace
workers suffer from, and struggle through, all the same faults and
challenges that all
people face. Our victories are testament to the fact that war and
killings, despite being
with us from our birth, are not the natural state of humankind.
Peace work isn't naïve
or ineffective--it's very effective, and it's informed by the spirit
of
what it truly means to be human. Its only problem is that not enough
people are doing it.
The war against Iraq brought out the biggest protests in world history.
More than 30
million people worldwide publicly demonstrated against war, and hundreds
of millions
more silently opposed it. But protest isn't enough. Instead of letting
the killing machine
disempower and devour us, we must strike back in peace against the
killers.
What might be created if the countless millions who dream of peace stopped
paying their
taxes, defunded and broke the back of the military-industrial complex?
What might be
created if millions risked arrest in non-violent civil disobedience,
and broke the back of
the prison-industrial complex? What might be born if we disengaged
from our culture of
materialism, ignored the fear merchants, and began to build direct
connections with our
brothers and sisters around the globe?
How many Arabs and
Muslims do you know personally? How many Iraqis can you call, " friend?"
Peace is not an abstract idea--it is a living and tangible reality that
takes practice, that
must be practiced, to be real.
Beit Al-Bacher, Tomorrow's
House, doesn't really make sense in Arabic. It's a nonsense
phrase. And in helping to build this house, the one word I've come
to truly hate is "
bacher" - tomorrow - because in Iraq "bacher" is a way of
saying that something will
never happen.
When will we have electricity?
Bacher. When will we have water? Bacher. When will we
have safety, and peace - an end to a thousand consecutive humiliations
and the million
lies that sustain them? When will the killing be done? Bacher, bacher
- we'll practice
peace in a tomorrow that never comes.
And yet, blessings be, there crumbles the true lie-- for here we are,
in the wake of war
and killing, in the midst of continuing violence and pain, living
in and building tomorrow's
house.
|